Essential Reads
Essential Reads is your one-stop source for the top stories of the day as reported by your favorite Washington Week panelists. It's a simple way to save time and stay informed about the news you need to know. Check it out every day!
Sep 10, 2012
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Romney struggles to gain traction in battlegrounds
By Sara Murray and Laura Meckler, Wall Street JournalWith two months to Election Day, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney faces the disconcerting reality that he isn't winning most of the states he would need to beat President Barack Obama.
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With $114 million, Obama just outraises Romney in August
By Jeff Mason and Sam Youngman, ReutersPresident Barack Obama's campaign and its Democratic partners raised more than $114 million in August, narrowly beating Republican rival Mitt Romney for the first time in months as the race for the White House approaches its final stretch.
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Romney aims to neutralize Obama's narrative
By James Kitfield, National JournalRead Mitt’s lips: no new taxes on the middle class, no net tax decrease for high earners, no cuts in defense spending.
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Romney and Obama trade shots over tax-cut math, Medicare
By Maeve Reston and Christi Parsons, Los Angeles TimesAfter a week in which Democrats repeatedly attacked his economic plan as beneficial to the rich and devastating to the poor, Republican nominee Mitt Romney insisted Sunday that his tax and budget proposals would help rebuild the middle class in America.
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Sep 07, 2012
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Economy adds 96K jobs
National JournalU.S. payrolls grew by a weaker-than-expected 96,000 in August, but the unemployment rate fell to 8.1 percent, Labor Department says
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Two Conventions Down, No Signs of Quick Help for the Jobless
By Jim Tankersley, National JournalThe voters demand action on jobs, and on Thursday night, the incumbent president running amid the worst election-year labor market in modern American history responded with the following: A bloody evisceration of his opponent’s economic philosophy. (“Feel a cold coming on? Take two tax cuts, roll back some regulations, and call us in the morning!”)
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In Democratic convention speech, Obama vows ‘our problems can be solved’ — with more time
By Dan Balz and David Nakamura, The Washington PostPresident Obama appealed to the nation Thursday night for another four years in office, asserting that his policies are slowly returning the country to economic prosperity while arguing that his Republican opponents would pursue a course that would set the country back and harm the well-being of middle-class families.
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Obama makes case for 2nd term: ‘harder’ path to ‘better place’
By Helene Cooper and Peter Baker, The New York TimesPresident Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for a second term on Thursday night, making a forceful argument that he had rescued the economy from disaster and ushered in a recovery that would be imperiled by a return to Republican stewardship.
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Dispatches From the Democratic National Convention
By John Dickerson, SlateIn 2008, if Barack Obama's outdoor convention speech had been moved inside, he still would have raised the roof. When he was denied the chance to speak in the elements at Bank of America stadium this week, the closed venue seemed fitting. Obama's speech to the 2012 Democratic National Convention, like his presidency, has a lid on it. It was workmanlike from a president who had to strain with the reality of being in office. “The times have changed,” he said, “and so have I.” At his 2008 address in Denver, audience members cried at the end of his speech. Tonight, one delegate said Biden had been more inspiring. Another said Bill Clinton's speech was the one she would be sending around to barber shops and beauty parlors.
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Two conventions tell the tale of 2012
By John F. Harris and Jim Vandehei, PoliticoRepublicans last week in Tampa and Democrats this week in Charlotte were not faking it. Partisans on both sides really do regard the other party’s nominee with contempt, and both sides look at the other’s agenda with genuine incomprehension.
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Sep 06, 2012
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How Bill Clinton does it
By John F. Harris and Jonathan Martin, PoliticoThe crowd was roaring, TV commentators were gushing, and Barack Obama himself thanked Bill Clinton for his nominating speech with a big hug as he left the stage here Wednesday night.
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Verdict is in: Obama levels more personal attacks
By John F. Harris and Alexander Burns, PoliticoA crabby, negative campaign that has been more about misleading and marginal controversies than the major challenges facing the country? Barack Obama and Mitt Romney can both claim parenthood of this ugly child.
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Platforms reveal deep divide on hot-button issues
By Major Garrett, National JournalWhile the economy dominates this presidential election, issues such as abortion, immigration, regulation, and—in a sudden and startling reversal of Democratic platform language—God and Israel, have added a dose of intrigue to the conventions.
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Biden’s speech likely to spotlight strengths, or foibles
By Peter Baker, The New York TimesFolksy and loose, passionate and sometimes off script, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. arrives onstage Thursday night as the president’s most important political partner, policy enforcer, conscience, scold and occasional albatross.
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4 years later, scarred but still confident
By Peter Baker, The New York TimesHe warned them in 2008, and when he formally opened his re-election campaign in May, he put it in his speech again. He will “never be a perfect president,” he said, a line he now repeats at stop after stop. The unspoken subtext: It’s not my fault if you didn’t listen or expected too much.
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Clinton delivers impassioned plea for Obama second term
By Jeff Zeleny and Mark Landler, The New York TimesFormer President Bill Clinton and President Obama hugged onstage Wednesday night after Mr. Clinton delivered an impassioned plea on behalf of Mr. Obama’s re-election, the 42nd president nominating the 44th to a second term with a forceful and spirited argument that Democratic values would restore the promise of the middle class.
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Bill Clinton offers forceful defense of Obama’s record
By Dan Balz and Philip Rucker, The Washington PostFormer president Bill Clinton delivered a spirited defense of President Obama’s handling of the nation’s struggling economy here Wednesday night, criticizing the agenda and philosophy of Mitt Romney and accusing the Republican Party of ideological rigidity and an unwillingness to compromise.
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Sep 05, 2012
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Obama didn't stop the middle-class free-fall
By Jim Tankersley, National JournalThe middle class in America today is not better off than it was four years ago, not better off than it was at the end of the Great Recession in 2009, not even better off than when President Clinton left office in 2001.
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‘Are you better off?’ The answer is less clear than it was in 1980
By John Harwood and Mark Landler, The New York TimesWhen Ronald Reagan asked voters a week before the 1980 election whether they were better off than four years earlier, he turned a race that had been nip-and-tuck for months into a landslide victory — and showed how a pointed question can be a lethal political weapon.
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Can Obama break D.C. gridlock if re-elected?
By Alexis Simendinger, Real Clear PoliticsPolarized, gridlocked, uncooperative, partisan, impossible. That's how Democrats -- including some of President Obama's past and current White House advisers -- described the nation's capital during several moderated discussion sessions Tuesday at the party's convention here.
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